Andrew*Debbie
Member
I've been told a 14-day ballot period by an RMT rep. Your information may differ.
What does that do to the planned RMT strike on 1 Feburary?
I'm on the picket lines that day too, but normally commute by rail.
I've been told a 14-day ballot period by an RMT rep. Your information may differ.
I've been told a 14-day ballot period by an RMT rep. Your information may differ.
What does that do to the planned RMT strike on 1 Feburary?
I'm on the picket lines that day too, but normally commute by rail.
What does that do to the planned RMT strike on 1 Feburary?
I'm on the picket lines that day too, but normally commute by rail.
That is very true, but we all know that, that is rarely followed up, and if it is they know their way around the procedure.The problem with that approach is that it causes sick people to come into work who then make other people sick. Thus sick pay from day one and careful monitoring of who is taking the mick is a better approach.
What RMT strike on 1st Feb? The only one I know of on that date is for drivers only.What does that do to the planned RMT strike on 1 Feburary?
But of course the media has muddied it so much, no one knows (public and some staff!) which dispute strike is which !It’s only RMT drivers striking those days. As you know, there’s not many of them, and this is different to the main RMT dispute.
No idea. But they could recommend rejection. I can’t see them recommending acceptance, even if Mick wants to.
What RMT strike on 1st Feb? The only one I know of on that date is for drivers only.
It’s going to come down to a TOC by TOC basis. Could end up in a situation where half the TOCs settle and the other half don’t. What happens then…I could see TMs being more willing to accept this than ticket office and station grades, so perhaps depends on the split in numbers between the two.
That’s still a strike by some members of the RMT though!
It’s going to come down to a TOC by TOC basis. Could end up in a situation where half the TOCs settle and the other half don’t. What happens then…
I could see TMs being more willing to accept this than ticket office and station grades, so perhaps depends on the split in numbers between the two.
Strings attached for sure. But station grades are set for a 13% rise over 2 years (which will be close to 13% in one go depending on pay anniversary date) + the lump back pay which would sway quite a few people to vote for it.Difficult to say. The pay offer has much more impact on station staff, as they are paid less.
The mood music doesn't sound good.
"Why should we agree to throw away everything we've sought to have and protect over the last however many decades in order to accept a below inflation increase"
I definitely don't expect a pay rise in line with inflation. That's a given.As has been stated before, nobody realistically expects a pay rise in line with inflation. That was just the start point for negotiation.
Many RMT staff have lost a lot of money during the strikes and some have started coming into work on strike days.
Whilst I expect many members will indeed reject the deal in the ballot, I think it might be quite a close call and may even get accepted by a small majority.
I can see them staying neutral if it went to a vote.
Why do you say they are not allowed to recommend rejecting it? What is that based on? A gentlemen’s agreement for this deal in particular?
Strings attached for sure. But station grades are set for a 13% rise over 2 years (which will be close to 13% in one go depending on pay anniversary date) + the lump back pay which would sway quite a few people to vote for it.
Do not underestimate workplace strike fatigue either, if it goes to a vote I would guess staff would vote for it.
I definitely don't expect a pay rise in line with inflation. That's a given.
The terms and conditions bonfire is a lot to take but as you say, how people shout in the mess rooms and online isn't always how things actually go.
Things like sick pay are things you don't always value until you unexpectedly rely on it.
Not bothered about 7 day working, I do it anyway.
Some people have a bit to gain, some have a lot to lose.
Many RMT staff have lost a lot of money during the strikes and some have started coming into work on strike days.
Whilst I expect many members will indeed reject the deal in the ballot, I think it might be quite a close call and may even get accepted by a small majority.
This is the thing; some posters have suggested that x-TOC does this, so it should be okay for y-TOC, but the problem is we aren't starting with a blank page. Decades of privatisation have destroyed any alignment between grades across TOCs - in some cases even within TOCs, for instance where the GN was once aligned with the West Anglia lines, both are now part of other networks.
So yes, some TOCs may have all station grades as one multi-skilled grade, some may have everyone with an individual role, but what are the other Ts&Cs at those TOCs? It's the overall package that needs to be looked at.
Is it likely that the busier stations will have booking office staff being safety critical-trained to dispatch trains and vice versa dispatchers covering in the ticket office, as part of the new multi-skilled role?
Is it likely that the busier stations will have booking office staff being safety critical-trained to dispatch trains and vice versa dispatchers covering in the ticket office, as part of the new multi-skilled role?
Gateline too. Apparently that’s the master plan in order to increase flexibility and therefore efficiency…which will make savings later down the line when redundancies and natural wastage happen.Is it likely that the busier stations will have booking office staff being safety critical-trained to dispatch trains and vice versa dispatchers covering in the ticket office, as part of the new multi-skilled role?
1989/90 it went on so long, it ended up falling like a jenga tower !As has been stated before, nobody realistically expects a pay rise in line with inflation. That was just the start point for negotiation.
Many RMT staff have lost a lot of money during the strikes and some have started coming into work on strike days.
Whilst I expect many members will indeed reject the deal in the ballot, I think it might be quite a close call and may even get accepted by a small majority.
Gateline too. Apparently that’s the master plan in order to increase flexibility and therefore efficiency…which will make savings later down the line when redundancies and natural wastage happen.
Whether it will actually happen is another story though.
Putting the offer to Members is one thing actually recommending it is another and I'm 100% sure they will not recommend it.If they don’t it could be an absolute PR disaster for them. Following the last offer all the coverage was how the government had torpedoed the talks by putting in a DOO clause at the 11th hour when an agreement was close. The government then removes the DOO clause and slightly improves the offer. To many that would look like an offer that could and should be accepted and rather than all the comments at the time about how stupid the government were for bringing DOO into the dispute it would look like a clever move and a trap the RMT has blindly stumbled into.
Is it likely that the busier stations will have booking office staff being safety critical-trained to dispatch trains and vice versa dispatchers covering in the ticket office, as part of the new multi-skilled role?